Six Ways to Improve Convenience Store Advertising Campaigns

Six Ways to Improve Convenience Store Advertising Campaigns

Whether you’re a manager at a large national chain of convenience stores or heading up a local family business, it’s important that your advertising budget is wisely spent. A badly run advertising campaign will not only be a waste of carefully guarded company funds, but may also damage your company’s reputation.

Here are six ways you can improve your current, and future, convenience store advertising campaigns:

1. Embrace Multichannel

The best advertising campaigns are ones that span a wide range of platforms and channels. From offline to online, and from mobile to video, why not find out what multichannel advertising could do for your store?

The best thing about multichannel is that you can reach people at different stages of the customer journey, and make your brand more visible in the local space. A billboard can be backed up by flyers and online ads, and a video campaign can be supported by flyers and events marketing.

Another way to do retail advertising is to partner with influencers (or other brands and businesses) and create campaigns and ads that combine their audience reach with your message, and vice versa. It’s a great way to attract wide range of people with an effective sales message, but you need to make sure you work with people who are a right match for your commercial goals.

2. Be More Personal

Hone in on your customers — what are they thinking about right now? How do they feel? What celebrations or events are they preparing for?

Personalization isn’t just about using people’s names in emails, but about really hitting home with offers and content that are likely to appeal to people on a deeper level. From the banners you hang up in store, to the flyers and emails you send out — put the customer in the driver’s seat. Advertising campaigns that are purely on “send, send, send” mode are unlikely to stick around in people’s minds.

Ads that incorporate social proof in the form of endorsements, testimonials or quotes are a great way to make your ads seem more like genuine word-of-mouth recommendations. Big retailers and grocers often use this “hear from our happy customers” strategy to create an aura of cozy familiarity — something which convenience stores should also capitalize on.

3. Go Bananas for Guerrilla Marketing

Guerrilla marketing isn’t as aggressive as it sounds: it’s a form of marketing that embraces the surprising, the absurd, and even the shocking.

Take a leaf out of the guerrilla marketing book and make your ads more exciting and vibrant. Why not try to make people laugh? A spot of color on the dreary sidewalk can light up people’s days, and some humor can make an ad stand out for people.

In today’s noisy world, creative ads and campaigns are remembered.

4. Tell a Sequential Story

Build up some momentum with people by approaching your ad campaigns more like narratives. Could you maybe take people on a journey all the way from food production to retail? What about storytelling — is there a creative way to narrate a last-minute family get-together over food, or show how a young man scours the store looking for his pregnant wife’s favorite soda? What about that convenience store present that gets you out of trouble during a fight?

You can tell great stories about convenience stores if you are willing to delve deep enough.

Ad sequencing is a tactic that digital marketers often use in order to “warm” the customer up and bring them closer to the brand. Whether online or offline, the same idea holds true: try to bring people in little by little, rather than always reaching for the obvious “on sale” hook.

5. Online? Go Programmatic

Online advertising can be a useful way to subsidize retail revenue and, if done right, online ads have good engagement rates. In order to ensure cost efficiency, it’s important to make the most of new ad technology like programmatic advertising.

Programmatic bidding leverages the power of machine learning. Instead of manually bidding for advertising spots online, going programmatic means that your ads will be shown in function of algorithms.

Whether your ads are on websites, videos or social media, going programmatic ensures that your online adverts are being shown to the right people. Online adverts are only really effective if they reach the right people, and you want to do that as cost effectively as possible.

At the same time, your adverts need to also be effective as a standalone piece of content. Don’t get so caught up in buying up ad space that you forget to work on your visuals, copy and value proposition. It’s worth spending time crafting and testing “the perfect ad.” This Facebook Ads Guide has some good pointers on ad creation.

6. Work the Store Floor

The best advertising happens once people are already through the doors, so make sure that you strategically use both visual merchandising and ads to get people to buy more. Think about seasonality and local events, and make sure that your shop caters to people in the community. Little things like weather can have a big impact on how people shop and what they buy, so always be attuned to what is going on outside your store.

Whether you have a huge retail operation under your wing, or it’s just you and your family, make sure that your in-store advertising is appealing, consistent, and 100 percent correct and error-free. There is nothing more annoying for customers than misleading advertising!

Advertising doesn’t have to be, and shouldn’t be, hugely costly. In today’s retail landscape, consumers are firmly in the driver’s seat when it comes to making purchase decisions. You can’t just bash them over the head with a great ad and hope for the best; what you’re offering has to be on-point, too.

Convenience stores should focus on their customer offering, and ensure that the shopping experience is as convenient as it can be. Leverage the power of convenience and celebrate your store’s role in the local community through advertising. Don’t forget to go big during the holiday season — it might even be worth storing up some reserve ad budget.

Editor’s note: The opinions expressed in this article are the author’s and do not necessarily reflect the views of Convenience Store News.